61 F. high on Thursday in St. Cloud.
50 F. average high for April 5.
54 F. high temperature a year ago, on April 5, 2011.
3.9" snow fell on St. Cloud on April 5, 1964
 Mild Into Sunday,
Mild Into Sunday,  Then A Flurry Of Jackets (And Frost). We knew it was inevitable, and a  frost is still likely by the middle of next week. Expect low to mid 60s  today, Saturday and Sunday - highs dipping into the 50s next week  (brrr...). Frost potential will depend on a number of variables,  including how quickly winds subside next week. My hunch: scattered frost  Tuesday morning, a more widespread frost Wednesday morning, as winds  ease up.
"
One possible contributing factor to the severe weather is the  presence  of unusually warm sea surface temperatures in the Gulf of  Mexico.  Moisture from the Gulf is a key ingredient for the severe  thunderstorms  that spawn tornadoes each spring, but right now, water  temperatures are  running up to 2°C above average in some spots, which provides added moisture for storms to tap into, enhancing atmospheric instability." - from a Climate Central article below. Image: U. of Wisconsin/CIMSS
  "
The whole idea is to evaluate new radar technology and new ways  of  collecting data and getting that into the warning process, getting  new  satellite applications into the warning process, new small scale  models  that can more accurately define where thunderstorms are going to  start  to pop up and get very strong, that's all part of it too," says  Steve  Letro, meteorologist-in-charge at the National Weather Service   Jacksonville." - from a story at wokv.com on ways to make tornado warnings more effective in the months and years to come; details below.
"
Commenting on the findings, Prof Mark Maslin of University  College  London said: "[This] should put paid once and for all to the  false claim  that the rise in carbon dioxide was a passive response to  increased  global temperatures." - from a Guardian article below.
"
Ice sheets around the poles are  showing evidence of serious  retreat,  which is expected to continue, and perhaps accelerate over  coming  centuries as warm ocean currents melt the ice front faster than  anyone  had grasped before. As, well, sea level rise from melting polar  ice  sheets is today slowly affecting every shoreline on the planet." - from an article at The Summit County Citizens Voice, details below.
"
Energy investments are not about “advancing an environmental  agenda,”  said Thomas Hicks, the Navy’s Deputy Assistant Secretary for  Energy.  “They’re about improving our combat capability, improving our  mission  effectiveness, and reducing our vulnerabilities to foreign  sources of  fossil fuel.” - from a National Geographic article below.
Latest NOAA Drought Monitor. The driest conditions  in the Upper Midwest can be found over the Minnesota Arrowhead, southern  Minnesota and much of northwestern Iowa. Much of Minnesota needs  anywhere from 3-9" to pull out of a deepening drought. Check the maps  out for yourself 
here.
Minnesota Ice-Out: 3-4 Weeks Early This Year. Here are some numbers from the 
Minnesota DNR web site:
  Lake                       Average                   2012
Leech Lake              April 28                   April 2
Gull Lake                  April 21                  March 26
Mille Lacs                 April 25                  March 26
Minnetonka               April 13                  March 21
White Bear                April 14                  March 19
A Dozen Texas Tornadoes Leave A Lasting Impression. A good overview from Andrew Freedman at 
Climate Central: 
"The  Dallas-Forth Worth area was hit by at least two large and violent   tornadoes Tuesday afternoon and there were reports of maybe a dozen more   throughout the state, according to the National Weather Service and   newswire reports. Weather Service damage assessment teams are surveying   the area and will determine the tornado count and preliminary strength estimates later today. One tornado has already been estimated at EF-3 strength on the Enhanced Fujita Scale.....One  possible contributing factor to the severe weather is the presence  of  unusually warm sea surface temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico.  Moisture  from the Gulf is a key ingredient for the severe thunderstorms  that  spawn tornadoes each spring, but right now, water temperatures are   running up to 2°C above average in some spots, which provides added moisture for storms to tap into, enhancing atmospheric instability."
Photo credit above: "
Local Dallas-Fort Worth television  stations captured incredible video of  two tractor-trailer trucks being  picked up and tossed in the tornado on  Tuesday." Courtesy: Climate Central and WFAA-TV in Dallas.
Very Unusual Start To Tornado Season. Here's an article from msnbc.com: "
Tornado  season is only just beginning, but already this year has  seen dozens  of destructive twisters from Illinois to Texas, where up to  18 might  have touched town on Tuesday alone in the Dallas-Fort  Worth area.  "We're at just the beginning of a very unusual" tornado season, NBC  weather anchor Al Roker said on TODAY.  The numbers show just how  unusual: March saw 223 twisters, up from an average of 80 from  1991-2010, according to the National Weather Service. February saw 63, compared to an average of 29; and January saw 97, compared to an average of 35."
Photo credit above: "
Residents salvaged what they could  after several tornadoes touched down  near Dallas on Tuesday, flattening  houses. More than 600 homes were  damaged, but remarkably nobody died.  NBC's Lester Holt reports."
Getting Ahead Of Severe Weather. Some good tips and interesting details from 
WOKV-TV: "
JACKSONVILLE,  Fla. In  the wake of the severe storms that have struck places like  Tuscaloosa,  Joplin, and most recently Dallas-Forth Worth, the National  Weather  Service is testing out some new radar equipment they hope will  allow  them to better predict. "The whole idea is to evaluate new radar   technology and new ways of collecting data and getting that into the   warning process, getting new satellite applications into the warning   process, new small scale models that can more accurately define where   thunderstorms are going to start to pop up and get very strong, that's   all part of it too," says Steve Letro, meteorologist-in-charge at the   National Weather Service Jacksonville."
Photo credit above: "
In this April 27, 2011,  file photo a deadly tornado moves through  Tuscaloosa, Ala. The National  Weather Service is kicking off an  experiment starting April 2, 2012  with a new kind of tornado warning  that's aimed to scare people into  seeking shelter.(AP Photo/The  Tuscaloosa News, Dusty Compton, File)."
Texas Tornadoes Leave Residents Stunned. An overview of the emotional toll from Tuesday's tornado outbreak in the Dallas area from 
The StarPhoenix; here's an excerpt: "
Patricia  Smith went to her son's home after Tuesday's tornado, stood  before the  devastation and cried. Except for the baby's nursery, the  house on  Haverford Drive was pretty much levelled. "I'm in shock," she said,  surveying the disaster in southwest Arlington. "I'm in absolute shock."  That  disbelief shifted to relief when her son Bradley Smith and his  wife,  Veronica, returned home. Patricia Smith embraced her sobbing   daughter-in-law. "I'm so sorry," she said. "At least you weren't there."
Photo credit above: "
Terri McKeever, left, and her husband  Randy, right, talk as they collect personal items from their tornado   damaged home Wednesday, April 4, 2012, in Forney, Texas. The mayor of   Forney, Texas, says it's "a real blessing" that nobody was killed in the   community by the tornadoes that ripped through parts of the Dallas  area yesterday. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)."
 
45% Of U.S. Tablet Owners On Device Daily While Watching TV.  Call me crazy, but the networks that figure out how to tie in iPad use  with (simultaneous) TV shows will be the long-term winners. When I'm  watching Mad Men it would be great to see a realtime stream from other  fans, with the ability to drill down into plot arcs or character  details. I know Conan (my hero) has experimented with this - it's a huge  opportunity. How do you consume media now? I watch the TV with one eye  (it's visual Muzak) while on my laptop and iPad. I'd pay more attention  to the boob tube if there was incentive, like an iPad app that  turbocharges my favorite shows...? Here's an excerpt from 
Lost Remote: "
Nielsen  published a research study today that further illustrates the  deep  overlap between tablets, smart phones and TVs.  The study looked at  how  frequently tablet and smart phone owners use their devices while   watching TV across the US, UK, Germany and Italy.  In the US, 88% of   tablet owners and 86% of smart phone owners say they used it at least   once over the last 30 days while watching TV.  But the daily numbers   stand out even more: 45% and 41% respectively."
  
 
The "Rockboard Descender" Tracked Off-Road Skateboard.  This sounds like a one-way ticket to the nearest emergency room, but  for those with more energy, stamina and coordination than me, here are  details from 
gizmag.com: "
Pushing  wood down grassy gradients can be quite a challenge for standard   wheeled boards. There are of course oversized or chunky options   available to help smooth over some of the bumps and dips, but hybrid   scooter maker Rockboard will shortly be releasing a new all-terrain   skateboard called the Descender, that features tank-like treads instead   of wheels. While it's clear that you're not going to get the   butt-clenching thrill or the hairline-raising speeds offered by adult   off-roaders like Scarper's powerboard or the DTV Shredder, with some considered course planning you could still be in for quite a ride."
  
 
 
A Metal Sculpture That Plays The Breeze. Every weather enthusiast should have one. Details from 
neatorama.com: "
This  totally tubular work of public sculpture is called Aeolus, named after  the god of the four winds in Greek mythology. Aeolus is designed to play  a sweet sound every time the wind  blows, because it’s made out of 310  polished steel tubes attached to an  arch that helps channel the breeze  into nature’s melody."
 
A Fine April Day.  Under a blue sky with light winds and low humidity highs reached the  upper 50s and low 60s across most of Minnesota. Grand Marais registered a  chilly 43 F. high, 59 in the Twin Cities, 61 at St Cloud and 62 at  Redwood Falls.
 
 
Paul's SC Times Outlook for St. Cloud and all of central Minnesota:
GOOD FRIDAY: Sunny, breezy and beautiful. Winds: S 10-15. High: 63
FRIDAY NIGHT: Clouds increase. Low: 43
SATURDAY: More clouds than sun, passing sprinkle or shower. Winds: S/SW 10-20 High: 62
SATURDAY NIGHT: Partial clearing - stiff breeze. Low: 42
EASTER SUNDAY: Partly sunny, cooler breeze kicks in. Winds: W 15. High: near 60
MONDAY: Jacket weather, plenty of chilled sun - frost possible outlying suburbs/central/northern MN. Low: 33. High: 47
TUESDAY: Metro frost likely. Bright sun - brisk. Low: 29. High: 45
WEDNESDAY: Slight chance of a freeze outlying suburbs. Brilliant sun - light winds. Low: 27. High: near 50
THURSDAY: Partly sunny, a bit milder. Low: 33. High: 55
 
Outlook: Flying Pigs
"I never think of the future - it comes soon  enough" muttered Albert Einstein. It's getting to the point where I'm  almost afraid to come to the office and check the maps.
Let's recap: 2010 was the wettest year in  Minnesota history, with the most tornadoes in the nation (145 according  to SPC). 2011 saw the Minneapolis tornado; probably the most severe year  for the USA since 1816. And then we had something vaguely reminiscent  of "winter"; 4th warmest with 22.3 inches of snow, 10th least on record.  Ice-out came 3-4 weeks ahead of schedule, during the warmest March on  record. Last month beat APRIL averages by nearly 2 degrees. 100+ cities  set all-time March records, some by a statistically impossible margin.  Now we're tracking brushfires on Doppler and Minnesota's drought is  getting worse. We need anywhere from 4-9 inches of rain just to get back  to normal. Boating Alert: you may need a new propeller by the end of  summer. And a few extra dock lengths.
At least you tend to see fewer fewer tornadoes in a drought. Small consolation.
A Saturday sprinkle gives way to Monday jackets -  the best chance of a metro frost Tuesday and Wednesday morning. You  knew this was coming, right?
* photo credit above: 
theblogmocracy.com.
 The Navy is  leading the charge, not because their priority is reducing greenhouse  emissions - but because they're trying to become more immune from shocks  in the worldwide oil markets, protect their troops and supply lines.  Within military circles there is little "debate" about climate change,  as pointed out in this article from The National Geographic: "
A 2010 Defense Department review   cut through political rhetoric and stated that climate change and   energy security are “prominent military vulnerabilities”.  Climate   change in particular is an “accelerant of instability and conflict,” the   report noted. In a recent article, Scientific American   noted that in addition to the very real combat situations that the  U.S.  military faces due to America’s over-reliance on fossil fuels,  rising  sea levels and increasing numbers of severe storms will have  serious  impacts on Navy and Marine operations and bases.  The  humanitarian and  political crises that will follow disasters, increased  drought and  potential fighting over resources will raise the burden on  U.S. troops."
Photo credit above: James L. Stanfield
Stopping Climate Change Is Cheaper Than You Think. An upbeat, encouraging story from 
The Atlantic: "
You've  heard it before: politicians say they'd love to take action  against  climate change, but they're reeling from sticker shock. Today, a  new  report from the UK's leading climate change watchdog refutes this   oft-cited argument that climate action will herald economic Armageddon. The Committee on Climate Change report,   with the hairy-sounding title "Statutory Advice on Inclusion of   International Aviation and Shipping," says that in 2050, the UK's   emissions reductions across the whole economy will cost 1-2 percent of   the total GDP. This updates, in greater detail, the range predicted half   a decade ago by the watershed Stern Review.  Just how much is that? For a rough comparison, one percent of the UK's   2011 GDP is a little more than what the country currently spends on   public housing and community amenities, and is no where near the big   ticket public spending items like healthcare. The UK has enshrined in  law an emissions reduction of 80 percent on 1990  levels by 2050."
Photo credit above: "
CarbonQuilt/Flickr."
Climate Contrian Case Wilts As More Studies Confirm Warming Trends. The story from 
Insurance Journal: "
A  clutch of recent studies reinforces evidence that  people are causing  climate change and suggests debate should now move on  to a more precise  understanding of its impact on humans.  The reports, published in various journals in recent weeks, add new   detail to the theory of climate change and by implication cast   contrarians in a more desperate light. To be clear: there’s nothing  wrong with doubting climate change; but  doubts based on ignorance, a  political bias or fossil fuel lobbying  don’t help. The basics, well  known, are that rising greenhouse gas emissions are  almost certainly  responsible for raising global average surface  temperatures (by about  0.17 degrees Celsius [app. 0.3°F] a decade from  1980-2010), in turn  leading to sea level rise (of about 2.3 millimeters  [0.0905 inches] a  year from 2005-2010) and probably causing more  frequent bouts of  extreme heat waves and possibly more erratic rainfall."
Climate Change Heating Up Our Winters. Here's an excerpt of a story at 
The Harford Courant: "
Loaded  dice: The perfect analogy for deciding whether our weirdly warm winter  was the result of climate change or luck. I heard this from  climatologist Michael Mann, who visited the University of Connecticut   last week to round out this year's Edwin Way Teale Lecture Series.  Just  as loading the dice with more weight on one side increases the   likelihood that the opposite number will appear, so too does loading the   atmosphere with carbon dioxide increase the likelihood that winters   like the one behind us will greet our future lives. Remember  winter?  Hardly any snow. The roof rakes stockpiled by merchants sat in   inventory. School systems coasted through the season without endless   cancellations and delays. Heating bills dropped. Governments shared   their snowplow budgets. Golf courses opened early. All of this sounds   like good news, depending on your interests and the time and spatial   scales you consider."
Photo credit above: "
This past winter was a far  cry from  the winter of 2011, when snowstorms were frequent and severe --  there  was even snow on the beach at Rocky Neck State Park.                                                  (Stephen Dunn, Hartford Courant / February 9, 2011)Robert M. Thorson."
Coke Pulls The Plug On Anti-Climate Change ALEC Lobby. Triple Pundit has the details: "
For several years now the Coca-Cola Company has charted a careful, politically neutral path to sustainability,   and now it has suddenly veered into new territory. Coca-Cola has   abruptly pulled its funding from the conservative lobbying organization American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC).   The move follows closely on the heels of negative publicity over   Coca-Cola’s ties to ALEC, coupled with the announcement of an online   petition asking the company to withdraw from the group. On the  surface  it may appear that Coca-Cola’s response is an isolated reaction  to a  self-contained controversy, but in fact it is part of a broader  trend  among major corporations, and it could indicate a real tipping  point  for the corporate support of lobbying groups that focus on  conservative  causes for some funders and neglect the sustainability  initiatives of  others." (why am I thirsty all of a sudden?) Yep, a Coke sounds good.
Designing Buildings For A Changing Climate In The Great Lakes Region.  The opportunities for new businesses, services and products in this  new, carbon-free, fast-forward economy will be massive, a chance to  reinvent America. One big piece of low-hanging fruit: construction. 
Michigan Public Radio has more: "
A  group of planners and designers is arguing that we need to rethink  the  way we make our buildings. The U.S. Green Building Council and the   University of Michigan recently put out a report: Green Building and Climate Resilience.  It  says design teams should start making buildings that are better  suited  to a changing climate. That could mean redesigning heating and  cooling  and storm water systems, and it could mean changing the kind of   landscaping we do. Larissa Larsen is the lead author of the  report. I  met up with her on a corner in Ann Arbor to take a look at a  new high  rise apartment building that’s going up."
Study Suggests Rising CO2 In The Past Caused Global Warming.  This is important - many skeptics float the theory that warming always  precedes spikes in greenhouse gases, but new research seems to confirm  that CO2 comes first, then warming. More from the U.K. 
Guardian: "
A  scientific conundrum that has puzzled climate experts for years may   have been solved with the publication of research showing how an   increase in carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere contributed to   rising temperatures millions of years ago. The paper, published on Wednesday in the journal Nature, has wide-ranging implications for climate science,   because the question of whether a rise in carbon dioxide leads to an   increase in temperature – or whether rising temperatures lead to an   increase in carbon dioxide – has been seized on by climate sceptics   eager to disprove a link between atmospheric carbon and global warming."
Climate And Carbon: The Link Just Got Stronger. Here's an excerpt from a story at 
Climate Central: "
Climate  scientists have long argued that ancient air trapped in  Antarctic ice  is the smoking gun that links carbon dioxide to global  warming. Over  the past 800,000 years or so the planet has gone through a  series of  ice ages interspersed with relatively warm periods (during  which  glaciers retreat back toward the poles) — and inevitably, these  warm  interludes happen when there’s more CO2 in the atmosphere. The only  tricky part of this argument is that the smoke seems to come  before the  gunshot. It’s most apparent in the most recent warming  period, which  began about 19,000 years ago: the temperature seems to  begin rising  before CO2 concentrations increase. Climate skeptics have argued that  since effects don’t come before causes, the whole theory falls apart."
Photo credit above: "
Credit: flickr/Rita Willaert."
Global Warming: Polar Regions Changing Faster Than Expected. Here's an excerpt of a post at 
The Summit County Citizens Voice: "
SUMMIT COUNTY — Global warming is changing Earth’s polar regions faster than expected, according to the U.S. National Research Council.  Ice sheets around the poles are  showing evidence of serious retreat,   which is expected to continue, and perhaps accelerate over coming   centuries as warm ocean currents melt the ice front faster than anyone   had grasped before. As, well, sea level rise from melting polar ice   sheets is today slowly affecting every shoreline on the planet. The  findings were compiled in a synthesis of reports from thousands  of  scientists in 60 countries who took part in the International Polar   Year  2007-08. The studies offer a benchmark for environmental   conditions and new discoveries in the polar regions."
Photo credit above: "
Big changes are coming to Antarctica. PHOTO BY BOB BERWYN."
 
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